• Federal Contract Coinage Values

Greysheet & Red Book® PRICE GUIDE

coin-icon-tr
Values / U.S. Coins / Federal Contract Coinage

The first coins issued under U.S. authority for which contract information is known today were the Fugio pieces, which were valued at one cent each. They were made under contract with James Jarvis, owner of a controlling interest in the Connecticut mint which was then striking Connecticut coppers in New Haven. Jarvis obtained the federal contract with a $10,000 bribe to Col. William Duer, then head of the Board of Treasury. The contract called for Jarvis to deliver 345 tons of copper coins to the federal government. Congress, which was ignorant of the bribe, directed on July 7, 1787, "that the Board of Treasury direct the contractor for the copper coinage to stamp on one side of each piece the following device, viz: thirteen circles linked together, a small circle in the middle, with the words 'United States,' around it; and in the centre, the words 'We are one'; on the other side of the same piece the following device, viz: a dial with the hours expressed on the face of it; a meridian sun above on one side of which is the word 'Fugio,' ["time flies"] and on the other the year in figures '1787,' below the dial, the words 'Mind Your Business.'" Jarvis was only able to mint 11,910 pounds of Fugios (equal to around 554,741 coins). Not all of these were shipped to the government, which cancelled the contract for failure to meet the delivery schedule. All Fugios were minted in 1788 and back-dated 1787. The dies were engraved by Abel Buell.

Sponsor

shop

Sponsor

shop US Coins and Jewelry

Sponsor

shop Whitman

Sponsor

shop

Available on Greysheet Marketplace

View All
1897-O $1 MS

Buy Now: $2,250.00

1902 $1 MS

Buy Now: $750.00

1900-O/CC $1 MS

Buy Now: $2,500.00

Dealer Directory

View All Dealers

Greysheet News

View All News
Panels Look at 2027 American Innovation Dollar Designs
Panels Look at 2027 American Innovation Dollar Designs
6/10/2026

In April, the Commission of Fine Arts and the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee considered design proposals for the 2027 American Innovation dollars.

In Memory of Joel Iskowitz, Coin Designer
In Memory of Joel Iskowitz, Coin Designer
6/5/2026

Joel Iskowitz, who designed more than 50 coins and medals for the United States Mint, has died at the age of 79.

United States Mint Kicks Off Sales for 2026 FIFA World Cup™ Commemorative Coins June 4
United States Mint Kicks Off Sales for 2026 FIFA World Cup™ Commemorative Coins June 4
6/4/2026

The United States Mint has begun accepting pre-orders for products in the FIFA World Cup 2026™ Commemorative Coin Program.